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CIRCULATION
Yearly Among
15,000
students
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
DAI LY J*?* TROJAN
SEMI-CENTENNIAL YEAR
VOL. XXI.
Los Angeles, California, Tuesday, January 14, 1930.
No. 67
DEAD LINE SET
for el rodeo
PHOTOS FRIDAY
i__
Borders Designed For Fraternity Pages; Make-up to Be Completed This Week.
S.C* Gridmen To Be Guests At Banquet
Election of Football Captain For Next Year Is Expected.
j A great Southera California foot-| bell team, together with those who : have "made” them, will gather at the tbe 1930 El Kodeo yesterday com- Hotel Biltmore, Thursday, January 16, pleted plans for the professional and wj,en u„. Varsity club will do honor honorary sections of the year book. to Waldo Throop, the presi
This announcement, according to dent of that organization ,is busy fin-Jiortoa Morehouse, assistant editor, J ishing his program, which will be makes it imperative that profession- made up largely from Hollywood tal-al and honorary fraternity and sor- ent, one of many reasons why Mr. ority members call at Austin stu- i Throop says this banquet will attract dios for appointments before Thurs- more old-time Trojan athletes than day at 4:09 p.m., as the makeup of ilas any other, the entire organizations sections will
Tho Trojan varsity, the Spartans, be comp e e )> and the freshman squad will assemble
NO students .nay obtain individual mus,c m
- - ___I. _ ri Dswlnrt n f ♦/-,«. T/Vi.
who the club oflicials believe, will be
Acceptance
of border designs for
present. The final settlement of the problem of electing a captain for next year’s team will probably be made, as Trojan athletes of past years look on.
If present plans of Mr. Throop prevail, the master of ceremonies will be
for El Rodeo after Fri-day, January 17, Morehouse says, and then only if appointments are made before the Thursday deadline. Seniors, too, must complete their sittings this week.
This announcement, Morehouse says, includes all student organizations excepting those in the College Conrad Nagel, prominent screen star, of Dentistry, which will be given | who, during the past football season, one week, beginning Monday, to ar- i showed a great deal of interest in range their photographs. Southern California’ football team.
Preliminary makeup ot the year The program will be under Mr. Nagel's book has been finished, the an. | direction at the banquet, nouncement from the editor’s ofllce stated, and the stafT will begin actual work on the various sections at once. In order that work may be completed on schedule, no deadlines will be shifted.
Regardless of the number of photographs taken ,the studios will leave the campus Friday, the report continued. No permission will be given for students to report to the downtown offices of Austin studios foliate sittings, as this would materially retard the completion of the book.
Several students have postponed sittings because of failure to wear formal clothing. No more postponements will be allowed, and students failing to bring the required costume to the studio will forfeit tlieir appointments, it was stated.
The Friday deadline applies also to all student body and class officers, and to members of the various editorial staffs.
Les Hatch, business manager of El Rodeo, reports that some organizations requesting pages in the book have failed to make a formal reservation and to leave a deposit at the business office. Owing to the demand for pages, and to the ruling of the organizations committee, only organizations which have turned in their lists of members and ofllcers to the organizations committee will be allowed to reserve pages, and reservations will be cancelled if a deposit is not made, or payment in full not completed before February 1, Hatch says.
CLUB TO WELCOME FRESHMAN WOMEN
Plans Laid For Next Semester’s Freshman Registration; Girls To Help.
With a pot-luck luncheon, music, and wagging tongues, the Freshman Women’s club met yesterday noon for their first meeting in 1930.
Plans were made for welcoming the new freshman women entering next month.
“Our aim,” announced Catherine Rohrer, president, “is to have every incoming freshman woman a member of this organization.”
Doris Tennant, president of W. S. G .A., who has been active ln this club in previous years, visited the meeting and gave the members a few helpful hints. The Freshman Women’s club meets every flrst and third Monday of each month.
Besides entering a skit in the Women’s Hi-Jinx, running taxis on the W. S. G. A. Taxi Day, and decorating the Y. W. C. A. rooms for Homecoming week,( this club is stimulating and creating a greater friendship between the freshman women of this university.
This club lias for its ofllcers: Catherine Rohrer, president; Helen Haver, vice-president; Dorothy Van Dyke, secretary; and Penelope Jackson, treasurer. All freshman women who are not already members are invited to attend any of the meetings.
To The Editor
INTEREST SHOWN RADIO EDUCATION DIVISION OF S. C.
Radio Students Suggest Courses On Demand To Be Broadcast Over KEJK.
Interest in collegiate radio lecturers was attested by the many letters and telephone calls received by the Kadio Education division of the university KEJK, during a suggestion period recently set aside for submitting definite hints as to instruction desired by radio students.
Subjects named included sociology, interior decorating, real estate law, Spanish, French, Italian, journalism, business law, sociology of motion
Hollywoodland (s »ampg), Jan. 13 — If the number of auto accidents lteep on increasing in Los Angeles there won't be any need of taking the next census. Merely regretting the situation without doing something about it is as useful as picking a false set of teeth. What ls needed is action!
A simple remedy for the traffic problem would be for the city council to pass an ordinance prohibiting women drivers from crossing intersections until the third bell rings.
It's getting so cold that you can't keep your ‘‘sunny side up.”
Yours for bigger and better bumpers,
Morrle Chain.
Council Head To Speak On ‘Chimi'Bound’
Field Secretary Of National Student Council To Speak At Dinner Wednesday.
Before returning to China this month, Egbert Hayes, fleld secretary of the national student council, is to speak at the Y. M. council dinner Wed nesday night, January 15.
During the short period Hayes has recently spent in America he has been particularly successful in his enter prises and in recognition of his achievements was paid a fitting trib pictures, international relations, tech- Asilomar conference held
nique of poetry, trade and transpor- j (iurjng Christmas vacation. He will tation, philosophy, mathematics, MS'jgpeak on the topic of “China-bound,” touching on the work being done in China at the present time.
Glenn Jones and Dr. Arthur Swanson of the university are to recount tlieir impressions and experiences at
VACCINATION FOR STUDENTS URGED E
All students who have not been vaccinated, within five years, are urged by Dr. Mabel M. Durbin, medical advisor, to avail themselves of this most important prophylactic procedure.
During the present month, 11 cases °1 smallpox, have been reported to toe Los Angeles Health department.
During the year 1928, 4,000 cases *«e reported.
During the year 1926, 160 deaths I * 1 Preventable, were reported from smallpox.)
t'nder thc caption, “Smallpox a Rentable Disease,” the American Relation for Medical Progress.
issued a bulletin; giving the accination condition of over 10,000 ‘Dallpox cases for the year 1925, u fron> tlie record of 17 differ-states.
Of the 10,000 persons affected, less two per cent had been vaccin-tack 8even years of the at-
1 seven Per cent had been vac-'■“niea seven to 50 years previous-’ an(1 more than
tory of art, salesmanship, landscape gardening, short story writing, shorthand and typing, curent events, education (methods of teaching), and psychology.
Ten subjects recommended by the radio listeners will be given as public, non-credit, lectures iu the University of Southern California Semicentennial lecture series offered every Monday from 4 to 1:30 and from 9:30 to 10 p.m., and on Wednesdays from 4:30 to 5 p.m., according to announcement of the iiadio Education division. These include current events, economics, international relations, philosophy, mathematics, history of art, Spanish, nch, Italian, and a series of 12
ctures on real estate. Short story writing, a favorite, is being contained for college credit..
“Social Aspects of Motion Pictures" is the subject ol' a now course introduced in tlie 1930 Winter Quarter as a radio credit course. Because of the Interest displayed in interior decorating, a radio course is planned by S. C. for the Spring Quarter, beginning in March.
the
per cent of persons aflected had never been 'Wclnated.
Comparative statistics .from states ot it* Vacc'aat'011 control, and lack Cain 0bUi“' are as follows. In 1925 “mla ted with 4,021 cases of one *W>X’ l*le *ar8t'st number in any •t»t,t4te' a" l'10 8ix New England ** ^Better had but 102 cases.
EDITOR MAY IKE CHANGES IN STAFF
Ail those who did not attend the meeting of the Wampus staff last week and who still wish to be considered on tlie staff are asked to see Hud Fetterly .editor, iu his olllce, Student Union 328, some time before the end of the week.
There are to be no additions to the staff for the forthcoming issue, states ihe editor, though the entire staff will be revised for the next issue aud all those who are not doiug their work will be replaced by persons who are capable to fulfill tlie positions and who can be counted upon to turn work in on time.
A Valentine party is being planned by the editor, more announcements of which will be given to the staff later iu the month.
the Asilomar meet as an added note of the council dinner.
With Harry Henderson, general secretary of Los Angeles Y. M. C. A., as its guest the advisory board of the campus Y had its monthly luncheon discussion yesterday noon in 321 of the student union building. Plans for February and early spring functions were made.
Professor Of Banking To Speak At Dinner
Dr. J. L. Leonard, professor of bank-nig and linance at the University of Southern California, will speak on "Business Outlook for 1930” before a dinner gathering of department heads of Soule Steel company at the Commercial club on Monday evening, January 13.
Trojan Club Program Set For Tonight
Music and Readings To Be Given At Last Semester Meeting.
The final meeting of the first semester of the Russian-American Trojan club will be held this evening at 8 m. in the Y. M, C. A. Hut. A program of music and readings has been prepared.
Miss Margaret Alice Head, winner of the $2,000 prize in the 1929 Phil- | harmonic Piano contest, w'ill play two numbers, “Aufsclnvung” (Soaring), by Schumann, and Russian Jazz by Klu-chanslty. Mr. Robert Ullman, a German artist who has recently come to this country, will sing a baritone solo, "Oriental Nights,” by Kluchansky. Two soprano solos, “Kremlin,” and "How Can I Forget Thee, Russia," will be sung by Miss Della Ramona Cohn. Both of these songs were composed by Madam Kluchansky. A character reading from Shakespeare will be presented by Mr. Douglas Robson. Mr. Robson is the author of many successful plays and has been an actor on the legitimate stage for a number of years. A group of clarinet and saxophone numbers will be played by Miss Mary Legensky, well known Russian artist.
The words and music of ‘‘Oriental Nights," “Kremlin,” ‘‘How Can I Forget Thee, Russia," and “Russian Jazz” are by Anna M. Kluchansky, a popular composer of a large number of Russian ballads and songs. Madam Kluchansky will be present at the meeting. Some of her numbers together with pictures of the artists who are to take part in tiiis program may be seen in the display case in the arcade of Bovard administration building.
Dr. Gilbert Giddings Benjamin, professor of history, is to speak on “My Experiences in the Settlement Movement on the Lower East Side.” Following the program there will be a social hour and refreshments.
Students, members of the faculty and of the staff of the university and their friends are cordially invited and urged to be guests of the Russian-American Trojan club on this occasion.
RECOGNITION GIVEN TO ORGANIZATIONS
Seventy-Seven Honorary and
Professional Fraternities Expected to Receive Approval.
Charters of recognition have been granted to 77 organizations of honorary or professional nature on the Southern California campus. Work of investigating the campus groups have been going on through the medium of the organizations committee under the direction of Fred Pierson, chairman.
The committee's recommendations are subject to the approval of the legislative council. The list of organizations recognized 10 date follows:
Y. M. C. A.
Y. W. C. A.
W. S. G. A.
Women’s Athletic association.
Sigma Sigma.
Mortar Board.
Spooks and Spokes.
Social Pan-Hellenic.
Social Interfraternity Council.
Amazons.
Trojan Knights.
Kappa Zeta.
Alpha Phi Epsilon.
Alpha Kappa Psi.
Alpha Kappa Kappa.
Phi Chi.
Alpha Eta Rho.
Trojan Squires.
Skull and Dagger.
Newman club.
School of Religion club.
Cosmopolitan club.
Chinese Students club.
Continued on Page Four
Social Dates Must Be Put On Calendar
Applications Are Now Being Filed With Dorothie Smith For Next Semester.
All dates for affairs to take place in the coming semester, February to June, 1930, must be secured from the vice-president of the Associated Students, Dorothie Smith, in room 201 of the Student Union building as soon as possible. The calendar is being drawn up now, and those organizations which procure the dates first will of course have a better selection of dates than those that put it off until the last minute, lt is compulsory that any organization wishing to have an affair must get a date on the calendar so that the date of the affair will not conflict with any all-Unlverslty function.
Dates may be applied for either by seeing Miss Smith personally inV her oflice during chapel hour, or by leaving a note on her desk to which she will reply whether or not the date is open.
A third of all the world’s railroad mileage is in this country.
Sociological Society Told Of Industry
Dr. Vincent Discusses “Five Modern Industrial Experiments in Relations Field.”
“Five Modern Industrial Experiments in the Field of Industrial Relations" was the topic discussed by Dr. Melvin J. Vincent of the sociology faculty at the meeting of Alpha Kappa Delta, honorary sociological society, held Friday evening at the home of the Rev. and Mrs. Paul B. Elliott.
The flve examples were selected by the speaker because they present the most advanced and representative plans in the field of industrial relationships today and represent approximately the greatest advance that has been made so far in “socio-industrial co-operation.” "The plans are significant because of the fact that they have generally succeeded in lessening social distance between employers and employees," said Doctor Vincent.
The Hart, Schaffner, and Marx plan was the flrst experiment cited by the speaker. Since its inception in 1911, the plan has succeeded in building up an admirable code of Industrial law, declared Doctor Vincent. It is formed by both employers and employees through the media of conferences.
Because it has been called the greatest industrial experiment of our age, the Baltimore and Ohio plan, commonly called the B. and O plan, was chosen as the second example. This represents, on a large scale, trade uniou co-operation with th# management.
Continued on Page Two
S. C. LAW REVIEW PRINTS ARTICLES ON LAW ANALYSIS
Publication Contains Articles On Trusts, Sovereign Rights, aad Oil Problems.
The current issue of the Southern California Law Review, published by the school Of Law, is now off the press.
The issue contains three leading articles; one by Frederick 11. Beh-rends, vice-president and trust ofllcer of the California Trust Company, of Los Angeles; dealing with the liability under trusts to creditors of trustor; a second by Ernest C. Carman, discussing sovereign rights and relations in the control and use of American water. The third article is by George H. Bowen of the Tulsa, Oklahoma Bar, dealing with the transmigration of oil and its problems. Each of these articles treats subjects of special interest to the Bench and Bar of the state of California.
Carmen is a member of the Los Angeles Bar and is recognized as an authority on the subject which he discusses in the S. C. Law Review.
The issue also contains the flrst installment of the "Restatement of the Law* of Contracts," with California annotations. Succeeding issues of the legal periodical published by tlie Trojan law school will contain a further treatment of this subject. When completed, this material will constitute a thorough treatment, according to Professor Robert Kingsley, editor-in-chief of the S. C. Law Review, of the restatement of the law of contracts, as made by the American Law Institute, and also a thorough analysis of the California cases in the fleld of contracts. It is planned that this service will prove of great value to the legal profession in this state.
In addition, the Law Review- contains a large number of comments and case notes on recent decisions, as well as a review of the recent leading legal publications.
BIG BASKETBALL RALLY SET FOR FRIDAY CHAPEL
New Coaching Staff Will Be Presented T o Student Body By Sam Newman.
As premiere for the S. C. basketball season prefacing our flrst home game when we meet Stanford Friday night, the rally Friday morning at 9:55 In Uovard is to constitute the formal presentation of the S. C.’s new coaching staff for basketball.
Coach Sam Barry will be Introduced to the campus, as will his assistant, Forrest Twogood, both of whom are new additions to the 8. C. athletic coaching staff. Coach Barry was formerly Director of Athletics at the University of Iowa for the past seven years.
As all-American forward of two years ago during his captaincy of the Iowa basketball team, Twogood gained national recognition which resulted in his recent engagement at S. C. He is at present also intercollegiate coach of the Los Angeles Athletic club.
Both men will make short speeches as will Captain Johnny Lehners who has been prevailed upon to represent the S. C. team before the student body. Inasmuch as the team has already seen action the past week-end at California, Lehners will be able to give attitude and possibilities.
“This being the .first real basketball rally of the season, and the final one of this semester, we expect every Trojan to be present to aid ln honoring our new coaching staff and the team," stated Sam Newman, chairman of the rally committee who will introduce the speakers. “In addition to the formal presentation, the committee has secured the Biltmore trio to fill the remainder of the program."
Iu addition to the popular songs presented by Earl Hurtnett’s trio, there will be several songs and yells led by Gordon Pace. Due to the length of tho rally, the program will begin flve minutes early, at 9:56, and will extend a few minutes over the regular chapel time. The 10:25 classes will meet on time and ample time will be allowed students to reach them without tardiness.
MUSEUM EXHIBITS MANY RARE BOOKS
Los Angeles on January 1 was just * London, Jan
\ note from the^Nev., and Salt Lake City, Saturday,
xactly $52,452,869.65 distant from insolvency, according to the annual report of City Treasurer Ned T. Powell, prepared for submission to Mayor John C. Porter and the City Council yesterday.
Washington, Jan. 13 — Reserving judgment on its ultimate prohibition conclusions, the Law Enforcement Commission—iu a preliminary report sent to Congress today—recommended that the national prohibition law be immediately strengthened iu the interest of promoting observance of any respect for all law.
New York, Jan. 13—Gene Tunney underwent an operation today at Presbyterian hospital for removal of a large stone from the entrance Po the right kidney.
British government to the French, published today, tacitly asked that France not come to the forthcoming London naval conference with a preconceived stand from which it might be difllcult to recede .
Geneva, Jan. 13—The Council of the League of Nations convened in its fifty-eighth session here today.
The council met in formal session only after it had considered cei Uuu budgetary matters in a preceding informal session. Both were under the chairmanship of August Zaleski, foreign miulsteu of Poland.
Los Angeles, Jan. 14 — (INS) — Search for Maurice Graham, veteran Western Air Express mail pilot who has been missing between Las Vegas,
will be directed from a radio-equipped base to be established today, weather permitting, at Britsol Mine, Nevada, 20 miles from Bioche, where he was last reported seen.
A tri-motored ship equipped with radio sending equipment was to leave Los Angeles to aid in the search. Several of the dozen planes participating in tlie search have receiving apparatus.
Clearing weather and general relief from the cold spell which has held California in its grip were forecast for late today by the weather bureau. The icy spectacle in the Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys was expected to depart, along with the unusual siege of cold weather ln Southern C#.llf:«r-nia.
WILBUR SPEAKS TO S1U0ENI DELEGATES
Two hundred and fifty delegates to the llfth annual national student federation convention at Lelaud Stan* ford ‘University hear and saw Hay Lyman Wilbur, secretary of the interior, and president on leavo of absence ot the university, address them while he was in Washington.
Tnable to lea^e Washington. Secretary Wilbur had a "talkie” made of his address to the students. He advised them not to take themselves too seriously.
“If you begin to pass resolutions and instruct the universities or the governments of the world how they should behave, you may find you have missed the real opportunity of making your federation a continuous cause for good,” he warned the federation.
Rare volumes showing early methods of printing and binding can be found at the motion picture museum of S. C. in the basement of the School of Law. A leather bound Bible, almost as large as a modern unabridged dictionary, printed in German in 1736, is one of the earliest examples of this type of binding.
The English Book of Common Prayer, about which there has been much recent discussion, is represented by a volume dated 1669. A personal prayer book written by hand on vellum in three languages by Queen Elizabeth of England, according to J. Tarbotton Armstrong, curator of the museum, also may be seen. Showing the type of illustrations used in the time of Shakespeare is a wood cut which was employed in one of the early editions of his works.
While it bears the fairly recent date of 1803, the History of Cambridge colleges is quite a rare book and an authentic reference on the early years of Cambridge colleges.
Among the novelties now on display at the museum are a complete set of ivory dominoes so small that they are contained in a box smaller than the flrst joint of one’s thumb, a pen, or quill holder formerly used by Marie Antoinette, and a watch case that the curator of the museum said dated back to the seventeenth century. In those days watches were too thick to be worn in pockets and this case was made to be worn as one wears a watch tob today. The works themselves were very noisy, making it necessary to have a pin in the case in o/der to stop the watch at night.
Y. W. C. A. DINNER CALLED OFF
The Y. W. C. A. dinner which was to be held Tuesday evening, January 14, has been called off, according to Miss Beth Tibbet, president.

CIRCULATION
Yearly Among
15,000
students
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
DAI LY J*?* TROJAN
SEMI-CENTENNIAL YEAR
VOL. XXI.
Los Angeles, California, Tuesday, January 14, 1930.
No. 67
DEAD LINE SET
for el rodeo
PHOTOS FRIDAY
i__
Borders Designed For Fraternity Pages; Make-up to Be Completed This Week.
S.C* Gridmen To Be Guests At Banquet
Election of Football Captain For Next Year Is Expected.
j A great Southera California foot-| bell team, together with those who : have "made” them, will gather at the tbe 1930 El Kodeo yesterday com- Hotel Biltmore, Thursday, January 16, pleted plans for the professional and wj,en u„. Varsity club will do honor honorary sections of the year book. to Waldo Throop, the presi
This announcement, according to dent of that organization ,is busy fin-Jiortoa Morehouse, assistant editor, J ishing his program, which will be makes it imperative that profession- made up largely from Hollywood tal-al and honorary fraternity and sor- ent, one of many reasons why Mr. ority members call at Austin stu- i Throop says this banquet will attract dios for appointments before Thurs- more old-time Trojan athletes than day at 4:09 p.m., as the makeup of ilas any other, the entire organizations sections will
Tho Trojan varsity, the Spartans, be comp e e )> and the freshman squad will assemble
NO students .nay obtain individual mus,c m
- - ___I. _ ri Dswlnrt n f ♦/-,«. T/Vi.
who the club oflicials believe, will be
Acceptance
of border designs for
present. The final settlement of the problem of electing a captain for next year’s team will probably be made, as Trojan athletes of past years look on.
If present plans of Mr. Throop prevail, the master of ceremonies will be
for El Rodeo after Fri-day, January 17, Morehouse says, and then only if appointments are made before the Thursday deadline. Seniors, too, must complete their sittings this week.
This announcement, Morehouse says, includes all student organizations excepting those in the College Conrad Nagel, prominent screen star, of Dentistry, which will be given | who, during the past football season, one week, beginning Monday, to ar- i showed a great deal of interest in range their photographs. Southern California’ football team.
Preliminary makeup ot the year The program will be under Mr. Nagel's book has been finished, the an. | direction at the banquet, nouncement from the editor’s ofllce stated, and the stafT will begin actual work on the various sections at once. In order that work may be completed on schedule, no deadlines will be shifted.
Regardless of the number of photographs taken ,the studios will leave the campus Friday, the report continued. No permission will be given for students to report to the downtown offices of Austin studios foliate sittings, as this would materially retard the completion of the book.
Several students have postponed sittings because of failure to wear formal clothing. No more postponements will be allowed, and students failing to bring the required costume to the studio will forfeit tlieir appointments, it was stated.
The Friday deadline applies also to all student body and class officers, and to members of the various editorial staffs.
Les Hatch, business manager of El Rodeo, reports that some organizations requesting pages in the book have failed to make a formal reservation and to leave a deposit at the business office. Owing to the demand for pages, and to the ruling of the organizations committee, only organizations which have turned in their lists of members and ofllcers to the organizations committee will be allowed to reserve pages, and reservations will be cancelled if a deposit is not made, or payment in full not completed before February 1, Hatch says.
CLUB TO WELCOME FRESHMAN WOMEN
Plans Laid For Next Semester’s Freshman Registration; Girls To Help.
With a pot-luck luncheon, music, and wagging tongues, the Freshman Women’s club met yesterday noon for their first meeting in 1930.
Plans were made for welcoming the new freshman women entering next month.
“Our aim,” announced Catherine Rohrer, president, “is to have every incoming freshman woman a member of this organization.”
Doris Tennant, president of W. S. G .A., who has been active ln this club in previous years, visited the meeting and gave the members a few helpful hints. The Freshman Women’s club meets every flrst and third Monday of each month.
Besides entering a skit in the Women’s Hi-Jinx, running taxis on the W. S. G. A. Taxi Day, and decorating the Y. W. C. A. rooms for Homecoming week,( this club is stimulating and creating a greater friendship between the freshman women of this university.
This club lias for its ofllcers: Catherine Rohrer, president; Helen Haver, vice-president; Dorothy Van Dyke, secretary; and Penelope Jackson, treasurer. All freshman women who are not already members are invited to attend any of the meetings.
To The Editor
INTEREST SHOWN RADIO EDUCATION DIVISION OF S. C.
Radio Students Suggest Courses On Demand To Be Broadcast Over KEJK.
Interest in collegiate radio lecturers was attested by the many letters and telephone calls received by the Kadio Education division of the university KEJK, during a suggestion period recently set aside for submitting definite hints as to instruction desired by radio students.
Subjects named included sociology, interior decorating, real estate law, Spanish, French, Italian, journalism, business law, sociology of motion
Hollywoodland (s »ampg), Jan. 13 — If the number of auto accidents lteep on increasing in Los Angeles there won't be any need of taking the next census. Merely regretting the situation without doing something about it is as useful as picking a false set of teeth. What ls needed is action!
A simple remedy for the traffic problem would be for the city council to pass an ordinance prohibiting women drivers from crossing intersections until the third bell rings.
It's getting so cold that you can't keep your ‘‘sunny side up.”
Yours for bigger and better bumpers,
Morrle Chain.
Council Head To Speak On ‘Chimi'Bound’
Field Secretary Of National Student Council To Speak At Dinner Wednesday.
Before returning to China this month, Egbert Hayes, fleld secretary of the national student council, is to speak at the Y. M. council dinner Wed nesday night, January 15.
During the short period Hayes has recently spent in America he has been particularly successful in his enter prises and in recognition of his achievements was paid a fitting trib pictures, international relations, tech- Asilomar conference held
nique of poetry, trade and transpor- j (iurjng Christmas vacation. He will tation, philosophy, mathematics, MS'jgpeak on the topic of “China-bound,” touching on the work being done in China at the present time.
Glenn Jones and Dr. Arthur Swanson of the university are to recount tlieir impressions and experiences at
VACCINATION FOR STUDENTS URGED E
All students who have not been vaccinated, within five years, are urged by Dr. Mabel M. Durbin, medical advisor, to avail themselves of this most important prophylactic procedure.
During the present month, 11 cases °1 smallpox, have been reported to toe Los Angeles Health department.
During the year 1928, 4,000 cases *«e reported.
During the year 1926, 160 deaths I * 1 Preventable, were reported from smallpox.)
t'nder thc caption, “Smallpox a Rentable Disease,” the American Relation for Medical Progress.
issued a bulletin; giving the accination condition of over 10,000 ‘Dallpox cases for the year 1925, u fron> tlie record of 17 differ-states.
Of the 10,000 persons affected, less two per cent had been vaccin-tack 8even years of the at-
1 seven Per cent had been vac-'■“niea seven to 50 years previous-’ an(1 more than
tory of art, salesmanship, landscape gardening, short story writing, shorthand and typing, curent events, education (methods of teaching), and psychology.
Ten subjects recommended by the radio listeners will be given as public, non-credit, lectures iu the University of Southern California Semicentennial lecture series offered every Monday from 4 to 1:30 and from 9:30 to 10 p.m., and on Wednesdays from 4:30 to 5 p.m., according to announcement of the iiadio Education division. These include current events, economics, international relations, philosophy, mathematics, history of art, Spanish, nch, Italian, and a series of 12
ctures on real estate. Short story writing, a favorite, is being contained for college credit..
“Social Aspects of Motion Pictures" is the subject ol' a now course introduced in tlie 1930 Winter Quarter as a radio credit course. Because of the Interest displayed in interior decorating, a radio course is planned by S. C. for the Spring Quarter, beginning in March.
the
per cent of persons aflected had never been 'Wclnated.
Comparative statistics .from states ot it* Vacc'aat'011 control, and lack Cain 0bUi“' are as follows. In 1925 “mla ted with 4,021 cases of one *W>X’ l*le *ar8t'st number in any •t»t,t4te' a" l'10 8ix New England ** ^Better had but 102 cases.
EDITOR MAY IKE CHANGES IN STAFF
Ail those who did not attend the meeting of the Wampus staff last week and who still wish to be considered on tlie staff are asked to see Hud Fetterly .editor, iu his olllce, Student Union 328, some time before the end of the week.
There are to be no additions to the staff for the forthcoming issue, states ihe editor, though the entire staff will be revised for the next issue aud all those who are not doiug their work will be replaced by persons who are capable to fulfill tlie positions and who can be counted upon to turn work in on time.
A Valentine party is being planned by the editor, more announcements of which will be given to the staff later iu the month.
the Asilomar meet as an added note of the council dinner.
With Harry Henderson, general secretary of Los Angeles Y. M. C. A., as its guest the advisory board of the campus Y had its monthly luncheon discussion yesterday noon in 321 of the student union building. Plans for February and early spring functions were made.
Professor Of Banking To Speak At Dinner
Dr. J. L. Leonard, professor of bank-nig and linance at the University of Southern California, will speak on "Business Outlook for 1930” before a dinner gathering of department heads of Soule Steel company at the Commercial club on Monday evening, January 13.
Trojan Club Program Set For Tonight
Music and Readings To Be Given At Last Semester Meeting.
The final meeting of the first semester of the Russian-American Trojan club will be held this evening at 8 m. in the Y. M, C. A. Hut. A program of music and readings has been prepared.
Miss Margaret Alice Head, winner of the $2,000 prize in the 1929 Phil- | harmonic Piano contest, w'ill play two numbers, “Aufsclnvung” (Soaring), by Schumann, and Russian Jazz by Klu-chanslty. Mr. Robert Ullman, a German artist who has recently come to this country, will sing a baritone solo, "Oriental Nights,” by Kluchansky. Two soprano solos, “Kremlin,” and "How Can I Forget Thee, Russia," will be sung by Miss Della Ramona Cohn. Both of these songs were composed by Madam Kluchansky. A character reading from Shakespeare will be presented by Mr. Douglas Robson. Mr. Robson is the author of many successful plays and has been an actor on the legitimate stage for a number of years. A group of clarinet and saxophone numbers will be played by Miss Mary Legensky, well known Russian artist.
The words and music of ‘‘Oriental Nights," “Kremlin,” ‘‘How Can I Forget Thee, Russia," and “Russian Jazz” are by Anna M. Kluchansky, a popular composer of a large number of Russian ballads and songs. Madam Kluchansky will be present at the meeting. Some of her numbers together with pictures of the artists who are to take part in tiiis program may be seen in the display case in the arcade of Bovard administration building.
Dr. Gilbert Giddings Benjamin, professor of history, is to speak on “My Experiences in the Settlement Movement on the Lower East Side.” Following the program there will be a social hour and refreshments.
Students, members of the faculty and of the staff of the university and their friends are cordially invited and urged to be guests of the Russian-American Trojan club on this occasion.
RECOGNITION GIVEN TO ORGANIZATIONS
Seventy-Seven Honorary and
Professional Fraternities Expected to Receive Approval.
Charters of recognition have been granted to 77 organizations of honorary or professional nature on the Southern California campus. Work of investigating the campus groups have been going on through the medium of the organizations committee under the direction of Fred Pierson, chairman.
The committee's recommendations are subject to the approval of the legislative council. The list of organizations recognized 10 date follows:
Y. M. C. A.
Y. W. C. A.
W. S. G. A.
Women’s Athletic association.
Sigma Sigma.
Mortar Board.
Spooks and Spokes.
Social Pan-Hellenic.
Social Interfraternity Council.
Amazons.
Trojan Knights.
Kappa Zeta.
Alpha Phi Epsilon.
Alpha Kappa Psi.
Alpha Kappa Kappa.
Phi Chi.
Alpha Eta Rho.
Trojan Squires.
Skull and Dagger.
Newman club.
School of Religion club.
Cosmopolitan club.
Chinese Students club.
Continued on Page Four
Social Dates Must Be Put On Calendar
Applications Are Now Being Filed With Dorothie Smith For Next Semester.
All dates for affairs to take place in the coming semester, February to June, 1930, must be secured from the vice-president of the Associated Students, Dorothie Smith, in room 201 of the Student Union building as soon as possible. The calendar is being drawn up now, and those organizations which procure the dates first will of course have a better selection of dates than those that put it off until the last minute, lt is compulsory that any organization wishing to have an affair must get a date on the calendar so that the date of the affair will not conflict with any all-Unlverslty function.
Dates may be applied for either by seeing Miss Smith personally inV her oflice during chapel hour, or by leaving a note on her desk to which she will reply whether or not the date is open.
A third of all the world’s railroad mileage is in this country.
Sociological Society Told Of Industry
Dr. Vincent Discusses “Five Modern Industrial Experiments in Relations Field.”
“Five Modern Industrial Experiments in the Field of Industrial Relations" was the topic discussed by Dr. Melvin J. Vincent of the sociology faculty at the meeting of Alpha Kappa Delta, honorary sociological society, held Friday evening at the home of the Rev. and Mrs. Paul B. Elliott.
The flve examples were selected by the speaker because they present the most advanced and representative plans in the field of industrial relationships today and represent approximately the greatest advance that has been made so far in “socio-industrial co-operation.” "The plans are significant because of the fact that they have generally succeeded in lessening social distance between employers and employees," said Doctor Vincent.
The Hart, Schaffner, and Marx plan was the flrst experiment cited by the speaker. Since its inception in 1911, the plan has succeeded in building up an admirable code of Industrial law, declared Doctor Vincent. It is formed by both employers and employees through the media of conferences.
Because it has been called the greatest industrial experiment of our age, the Baltimore and Ohio plan, commonly called the B. and O plan, was chosen as the second example. This represents, on a large scale, trade uniou co-operation with th# management.
Continued on Page Two
S. C. LAW REVIEW PRINTS ARTICLES ON LAW ANALYSIS
Publication Contains Articles On Trusts, Sovereign Rights, aad Oil Problems.
The current issue of the Southern California Law Review, published by the school Of Law, is now off the press.
The issue contains three leading articles; one by Frederick 11. Beh-rends, vice-president and trust ofllcer of the California Trust Company, of Los Angeles; dealing with the liability under trusts to creditors of trustor; a second by Ernest C. Carman, discussing sovereign rights and relations in the control and use of American water. The third article is by George H. Bowen of the Tulsa, Oklahoma Bar, dealing with the transmigration of oil and its problems. Each of these articles treats subjects of special interest to the Bench and Bar of the state of California.
Carmen is a member of the Los Angeles Bar and is recognized as an authority on the subject which he discusses in the S. C. Law Review.
The issue also contains the flrst installment of the "Restatement of the Law* of Contracts," with California annotations. Succeeding issues of the legal periodical published by tlie Trojan law school will contain a further treatment of this subject. When completed, this material will constitute a thorough treatment, according to Professor Robert Kingsley, editor-in-chief of the S. C. Law Review, of the restatement of the law of contracts, as made by the American Law Institute, and also a thorough analysis of the California cases in the fleld of contracts. It is planned that this service will prove of great value to the legal profession in this state.
In addition, the Law Review- contains a large number of comments and case notes on recent decisions, as well as a review of the recent leading legal publications.
BIG BASKETBALL RALLY SET FOR FRIDAY CHAPEL
New Coaching Staff Will Be Presented T o Student Body By Sam Newman.
As premiere for the S. C. basketball season prefacing our flrst home game when we meet Stanford Friday night, the rally Friday morning at 9:55 In Uovard is to constitute the formal presentation of the S. C.’s new coaching staff for basketball.
Coach Sam Barry will be Introduced to the campus, as will his assistant, Forrest Twogood, both of whom are new additions to the 8. C. athletic coaching staff. Coach Barry was formerly Director of Athletics at the University of Iowa for the past seven years.
As all-American forward of two years ago during his captaincy of the Iowa basketball team, Twogood gained national recognition which resulted in his recent engagement at S. C. He is at present also intercollegiate coach of the Los Angeles Athletic club.
Both men will make short speeches as will Captain Johnny Lehners who has been prevailed upon to represent the S. C. team before the student body. Inasmuch as the team has already seen action the past week-end at California, Lehners will be able to give attitude and possibilities.
“This being the .first real basketball rally of the season, and the final one of this semester, we expect every Trojan to be present to aid ln honoring our new coaching staff and the team," stated Sam Newman, chairman of the rally committee who will introduce the speakers. “In addition to the formal presentation, the committee has secured the Biltmore trio to fill the remainder of the program."
Iu addition to the popular songs presented by Earl Hurtnett’s trio, there will be several songs and yells led by Gordon Pace. Due to the length of tho rally, the program will begin flve minutes early, at 9:56, and will extend a few minutes over the regular chapel time. The 10:25 classes will meet on time and ample time will be allowed students to reach them without tardiness.
MUSEUM EXHIBITS MANY RARE BOOKS
Los Angeles on January 1 was just * London, Jan
\ note from the^Nev., and Salt Lake City, Saturday,
xactly $52,452,869.65 distant from insolvency, according to the annual report of City Treasurer Ned T. Powell, prepared for submission to Mayor John C. Porter and the City Council yesterday.
Washington, Jan. 13 — Reserving judgment on its ultimate prohibition conclusions, the Law Enforcement Commission—iu a preliminary report sent to Congress today—recommended that the national prohibition law be immediately strengthened iu the interest of promoting observance of any respect for all law.
New York, Jan. 13—Gene Tunney underwent an operation today at Presbyterian hospital for removal of a large stone from the entrance Po the right kidney.
British government to the French, published today, tacitly asked that France not come to the forthcoming London naval conference with a preconceived stand from which it might be difllcult to recede .
Geneva, Jan. 13—The Council of the League of Nations convened in its fifty-eighth session here today.
The council met in formal session only after it had considered cei Uuu budgetary matters in a preceding informal session. Both were under the chairmanship of August Zaleski, foreign miulsteu of Poland.
Los Angeles, Jan. 14 — (INS) — Search for Maurice Graham, veteran Western Air Express mail pilot who has been missing between Las Vegas,
will be directed from a radio-equipped base to be established today, weather permitting, at Britsol Mine, Nevada, 20 miles from Bioche, where he was last reported seen.
A tri-motored ship equipped with radio sending equipment was to leave Los Angeles to aid in the search. Several of the dozen planes participating in tlie search have receiving apparatus.
Clearing weather and general relief from the cold spell which has held California in its grip were forecast for late today by the weather bureau. The icy spectacle in the Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys was expected to depart, along with the unusual siege of cold weather ln Southern C#.llf:«r-nia.
WILBUR SPEAKS TO S1U0ENI DELEGATES
Two hundred and fifty delegates to the llfth annual national student federation convention at Lelaud Stan* ford ‘University hear and saw Hay Lyman Wilbur, secretary of the interior, and president on leavo of absence ot the university, address them while he was in Washington.
Tnable to lea^e Washington. Secretary Wilbur had a "talkie” made of his address to the students. He advised them not to take themselves too seriously.
“If you begin to pass resolutions and instruct the universities or the governments of the world how they should behave, you may find you have missed the real opportunity of making your federation a continuous cause for good,” he warned the federation.
Rare volumes showing early methods of printing and binding can be found at the motion picture museum of S. C. in the basement of the School of Law. A leather bound Bible, almost as large as a modern unabridged dictionary, printed in German in 1736, is one of the earliest examples of this type of binding.
The English Book of Common Prayer, about which there has been much recent discussion, is represented by a volume dated 1669. A personal prayer book written by hand on vellum in three languages by Queen Elizabeth of England, according to J. Tarbotton Armstrong, curator of the museum, also may be seen. Showing the type of illustrations used in the time of Shakespeare is a wood cut which was employed in one of the early editions of his works.
While it bears the fairly recent date of 1803, the History of Cambridge colleges is quite a rare book and an authentic reference on the early years of Cambridge colleges.
Among the novelties now on display at the museum are a complete set of ivory dominoes so small that they are contained in a box smaller than the flrst joint of one’s thumb, a pen, or quill holder formerly used by Marie Antoinette, and a watch case that the curator of the museum said dated back to the seventeenth century. In those days watches were too thick to be worn in pockets and this case was made to be worn as one wears a watch tob today. The works themselves were very noisy, making it necessary to have a pin in the case in o/der to stop the watch at night.
Y. W. C. A. DINNER CALLED OFF
The Y. W. C. A. dinner which was to be held Tuesday evening, January 14, has been called off, according to Miss Beth Tibbet, president.